Following an intense
campaign by PETA India and work by MP Maneka Gandhi, Drug Controller
General of India (DCGI) Dr GN Singh announced that testing cosmetics and their
ingredients on animals will not be permitted in India. The landmark
announcement was made during the Bureau of Indian Standards PCD 19 Cosmetics
Sectional Committee meeting, on which PETA India's science policy advisor, Dr
Chaitanya Koduri, has an official seat. Earlier this week, Dr Koduri had held a
private meeting with Dr Singh urging him to implement this ban.
Multinational companies The Body Shop and LUSH as well as
Indian companies Trumount Cosmoceuticals, Future Skin, Omved Lifestyle and Shahnaz Husain
and others had also written to the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare in
full support of a ban after hearing from PETA. The Washington DC-based Physicians
Committee for Responsible Medicine, and officials from the Indian Council of Medical Research,
the Mahatma
Gandhi–Doerenkamp Center for Alternatives to Use of Animals in Life Science
Education and theAnimal
Welfare Board of India, a statutory advisory body, had also all
expressed support for the ban.
In 2012, the cast and
crew of Farah Khan's
Joker,
directed by Shirish
Kunder and starring Akshay
Kumar, Sonakshi Sinha and Chitrangda Singh, had joined PETA in
urging the government to ban cosmetic testing on animals. Chitrangda posed on
behalf of PETA and Joker with the aliens from the film for the campaign. The ad
was shot by ace photographer Atul
Kasbekar.
DCGI's announcement
comes in the wake of the European Union's and Israel's bans on the testing of
cosmetics products and their ingredients on animals, which includes a ban on
sales of animal-tested cosmetics, regardless of where those tests were
conducted. Israel has also banned the testing of household products and their
ingredients on animals as well as the sale of such products if they have been
tested on animals. Household products include cleaners and detergents. PETA
India is also campaigning for an end to the testing of household products and
their ingredients on animals in India.
Please note, however,
that at present, cosmetics and personal-care products tested on animals can
still be sold in India. Please do check PETA's list of
companies that do not test on animals before you go shopping.
Congratulations to
everyone who worked so hard on this campaign, from celebrities, politicians and
compassionate businesses who lent their support to the many PETA India
supporters who raised their voices and donated time and money to make this
achievement possible. Celebrations are in order all around!
Posted by Erika-G
Link to PETA India: http://www.petaindia.com/b/petaokplease/archive/2013/06/28/dcgi-ends-cosmetic-testing-on-animals.aspx
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